1170

Calendar year From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Year 1170 (MCLXX) was a common year starting on Thursday of the Julian calendar.

Quick facts
1170 in various calendars
Gregorian calendar1170
MCLXX
Ab urbe condita1923
Armenian calendar619
ԹՎ ՈԺԹ
Assyrian calendar5920
Balinese saka calendar1091–1092
Bengali calendar576–577
Berber calendar2120
English Regnal year16 Hen. 2  17 Hen. 2
Buddhist calendar1714
Burmese calendar532
Byzantine calendar6678–6679
Chinese calendar己丑年 (Earth Ox)
3867 or 3660
     to 
庚寅年 (Metal Tiger)
3868 or 3661
Coptic calendar886–887
Discordian calendar2336
Ethiopian calendar1162–1163
Hebrew calendar4930–4931
Hindu calendars
 - Vikram Samvat1226–1227
 - Shaka Samvat1091–1092
 - Kali Yuga4270–4271
Holocene calendar11170
Igbo calendar170–171
Iranian calendar548–549
Islamic calendar565–566
Japanese calendarKaō 2
(嘉応2年)
Javanese calendar1077–1078
Julian calendar1170
MCLXX
Korean calendar3503
Minguo calendar742 before ROC
民前742年
Nanakshahi calendar−298
Seleucid era1481/1482 AG
Thai solar calendar1712–1713
Tibetan calendarས་མོ་གླང་ལོ་
(female Earth-Ox)
1296 or 915 or 143
     to 
ལྕགས་ཕོ་སྟག་ལོ་
(male Iron-Tiger)
1297 or 916 or 144
Close
Murder of Thomas Becket (c. 1200)

Events

By place

Levant

  • Winter Egyptian forces, led by Saladin, invade the Kingdom of Jerusalem, and besiege Darum on the Mediterranean coast. Its defenses are weak, and though Saladin has no siege engines with him, the fall seems imminent. King Amalric I withdraws his Templar garrison from Gaza, to assist him in defending Darum. Saladin raises the siege and marches on Gaza, where he captures the lower town (despite the stiff resistance ordered by Lord Miles of Plancy), and massacres the inhabitants. However, the citadel is too strong for Saladin, and he is forced to retreat to Egypt.[1]
  • Saladin sends an Egyptian squadron up the Gulf of Aqaba, which captures the Crusader outpost of Aila, at the head of the Gulf.[2]

England

Ireland

Africa

Asia

By topic

Folklore

Religion

  • Peter Waldo, a French merchant of Lyon, starts the popular religious movement of the "Poor Men of Lyon", or Waldenses.[8]
  • Pope Alexander III addresses a series of letters to the backward Swedish church. He wants to impose the strict canonical requirements on the Swedes, that is, the ecclesiastical legal system. Due to being Christianized in 1050, Sweden is having trouble to fully adapt to the Catholicism that is preached and acted on in Europe.[9]

Births

Deaths

References

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